CANADA STOCKS-TSX falls as gold miners, energy stocks weigh

3 Min Read

(Adds analysts’ comments, updates prices to close)

* TSX ends down 96.60 points, or 0.68 percent, at 14,134.46

* Seven of TSX’s 10 main groups fall

By Alastair Sharp

TORONTO, July 7 (Reuters) - Canada’s main stock index fell on Thursday as gold miners retreated following their sharp rally since Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and as a reversal in oil prices weighed on energy companies.

Its energy group fell 1.5 percent, reversing earlier gains, as oil prices fell to two-month lows after a U.S. weekly crude draw that disappointed bullish traders.

“People are cautious, people are taking some profits and waiting to see what happens tomorrow with non-farm payrolls,” said Ian Makamoto, director of research at MacDougall, MacDougall & MacTier, referring to U.S. jobs data due on Friday.

Also weighing on the index was its hefty gold mining group, which pulled back following a steady rise since the Brexit vote sideswiped financial markets in late June.

The biggest drags on the market included two of the world’s largest producers, with Barrick Gold Corp down 3.2 percent to C$29.08 and Goldcorp Inc off 2.2 percent at C$25.50.

The S&P/TSX Global Gold sub-index had rallied more than 20 percent since the vote, as investors rushing to buy bullion amid economic uncertainty pushed the metal to a two-year high.

“The gold commodity itself should be able to lift as time progresses,” said Sid Mokhtari, a market technician at CIBC World Markets.

The materials group, which includes precious and base metals miners and fertilizer companies, lost 2.3 percent.

Canada’s banking regulator said it was tightening oversight of mortgage lending, citing concerns about record household debt levels and a sharp jump in house prices in some markets.

The value of Canadian building permits issued in May dropped 1.9 percent from April, in part due to sharply weaker construction intentions in energy-producing Alberta, Statistics Canada said.

The pace of purchasing activity in Canada picked up in June as measures of employment and inventories jumped, according to Ivey Purchasing Managers Index data. (Reporting by Alastair Sharp; Editing by James Dalgleish and Richard Chang)